km^mmmmrnTAmrn ^ tow To Be Fart Of i Labor Day Program S^Hual l'?*t Show*will I | in August 30, in school football Km will be in con I H afcor Da? Pro-1 enthsiasm of prior ^^^fttiows according to chairman of the ^^Hdicted considerable young pet owners Hig show for specta 4^^Hci>mmittee will also doll show, which pet show. Hie job of program ^Hr pet show is Harry H has already an ,^^Hteen classifications, Hirizes and selected t^^Kh the most distinc I^^Burh as the curliest ^Js, most spots, short Hist expressive eyes Pets whose bodies ^^Hortest, most nearly will win. The pet ^^Hrly resembles his I the best trained, I who shows the most care, or who is the most unusual will earn an award. First prize winners will earn for their masters $1 each, according to the committee. An unspecified prize will be awarded to the three pets who appear the most outstanding, in the opinion of the judges. All own ers of entries will be given a Cub Scout button as a token for their participation in the show. It was pointed out that a pet can win first prize in one classification only. The comriittee hopes to have all parts of Haywood county represent ed in the show, and has stated that pets, whose owners are Champion employees, but live in Buncombe, < may also be entered. J Chairman Matthews urges early i registration of pets. All pets may 1 be entered by calling Mr. Matthews i at telephone 3095 in Canton.. I Pet owners in Canton should con- > tact Cub Scout Hen Mothers as follows: Mrs. Clifton Drake, Mrs. < James Haynie, Jr., Mrs. James t Hurley, Mrs. Harold Lawrence, Mrs. i Eugene MUner, Mrs. Roy Patton, < Mrs. Gordon Rodgers, Mrs. T. M. i Rudisill, and Mrs. J. R. Sechrest. < Judges will be Dr. A. R. Riegg, ' a Waynesville veterinarian, Mrs. < A. R. Riegg, and Miss Pearl John- * son, head of the Haywood county 1 Society for the Prevention of 1 Cruelty to Animals. j Bet teat Spot In Body Physiologists at the University of a Pennsylvania reported their finding 0 that the hottest place in the human ? body is within the heart, where 90 v degrees Fahrenheit was registered e I[ Foot Germ Io Kill It. ne Hour, your 40c back. This ngiride SLOUGHS er skin to expose Kills it on contact, ss. instant - drying Irug store. Today at G .STORE. IlETE AND R BLOCKS R SPECIALTY rd Prices 12" 26c 8" .... 18c 18c ck 55c , 22c fk. per M $21 ULLNOSE SASH ny oilier special j ju want LBERT ! PRODUCTS CO. E Dial 4463 == Pvt. Setzer With 2nd Infantry Division Pvt. Samuel M. Setzer of Maggie, now 1* serving on the western Ko rean front with the 2nd Infantry Division. His unit recently captured "Old Baldy" mountain, northwest of Chorwon, to climax one of the bit terest see-saw battles of the Ko rean war. Private Setzer is serving with the division as a hospital corpsman. Rotarians Warned Of Socialism, , Inflation Dangers Creeping socialism ? and the threat o( spending ourselves into national bankruptcy?are the un derlying threats to the basic prin ciples of the American way of liv ing, members of the Waynesville Rotary Club were told by S. Ken drlck Guernsey, past president of Rotary International, at the club's regular weekly meeting Friday. "There's a lot going on in this country today that you don't read in the newspapers. It has nothing to do with the threat of war?the atoniic bomb?flying saucers?or the fact that the big bad wolf?in flation ? may be just around the corner," Mr. Guernsey said. "It has to do with this steady, insidious chipping away at what we know as freedom. And we'll gamble that if the people really knew the whole truth, really knew how care fully the plans have been made ? there would be considerable change from Canada to the Gulf, and all the way across the country." The speaker listed several things that the next President should do to "clean house". "Among them," he said, "the most important is to place some sort of economy meas ures in the terrific amount of spending the Federal government is engaged in." He called for a re duction in the number of govern ment workers, retirement of those ambassadors throughout the world who are without diplomatic train ing. and who have been placed in their positions merely to discharge i political debt. "We will," he said, "decide which if the two major candidates for ;he Presidency seems most detcrm ned, most able and most likely to :lean our house of government, ind then we will invest our time, >ur effort, our all in electing that nan. Both Governor Stevenson and jleneral Eisenhower are honorable ind capable men, and both have ad nitted a house-cleaning job is leeded. Which will do the better ob?" Mr. Guernsey urged everyone to nake the business of government deep concern, study what each andidate advocates, because "if we lon't put the right man into office ve will deserve the kind of gov-; rnment we will have, and the kind of world in which wc will have to live." The club had 46 visitors, with 23 of them from Florida. It was visitor's day, with Bill I'earce, of Falatka, presiding for Dave Felmet, local president. Cottage Cheese Cottage cheese can be used to ex cellent advantage as a basic ingre dient for a variety of fruit or vege table salads Rotarians Hear Past International President I S. Kendrick Guernsey, past international president of Rotary, addressed the Waynpsville club on Fri day. On the left is Malcolm Williamson, past district governor of Rotary, and on the right is B C. Pearce. of Palatka., Fla.. who presided at the Visitor's Day Program. Mr. Guernsey is from Jackson ville, and spends some of his vacation in this area. (Mountaineer Photoi. A. J. Garrison Visits Adriatic Seaports While serving aboard the des troyer minesweeper USS Jeffers, | A. J. Garrison, cominissaryman j first class, USN, brother of John Garrison, recently completed operational visits to Adriutiic sea ports in the Northern Adriatic Sea Crewmembers visited Venice, lialy a;id the Free Territory of Trieste and ports in Southern Italy.; Greece and Sardinia. ? | Emergency Gear In El Paso, the new Providence i memorial hospital's expectant fa thers' room was equipped with two oxvgen outlets ' ! Lions Hear Account of Farm Tour to Canada R. C. Francis, well-known farm er of Katcliffe Cove, was the guest speaker at the last regular meeting | of the Lions Club, which was held at Patrick's Thursday night. Mr. Francis talked to the group about the recent farm tour which took a group of Haywood citizens as far north as Canada. "We ab sorbed more in the nine days we ' were gone than we could have in nine days of constant reading." Mr. Francis said. He praised the County Agent's office for the expert planning of the trip and said that, without such split second timing, the group would never have seen a great part ; of the many interesting sights 011 I the trip. David Underwood was program chairman. Registration Dates Are Set At The W.T.H.S. Registration at Wayne ville High School will start Monday. Aug 25 and last five days thr